Chapter 17Technology in Long-Term Care
Learning Objectives
1. Identify and define potential applications of an information technology system
2. Discuss issues dealing with privacy and access to information
3. Understand how technology can benefit long-term care providers, consumers, and the system as a whole
Learning Objectives (continued)
4. Identify barriers to the successful use of information technology
5. Identify and define options for acquiring and using information technology
Introduction
Technology is becoming ever more important to long-term care
The ways in which technology can be used in long-term care fall into two broad categories: applied technology and health information technology (HIT)
Applied Technology
Artificial functioning Remote monitoring/telehealth Emergency notification Telemedicine
Health Information Technology
Applications: Clinical Administrative Strategic support Networking Systemwide
Clinical Applications
Admission, assessment, care planning Consumer safety• Scheduling and tracking ancillary
services Record keeping Quality measurement
Administrative Applications
Staffing Financial
management
Strategic Support Applications
Planning Operational decision making Performance measurement Marketing
Networking Applications
Involvement in integrated health systems
Coordination of information Patient scheduling Managed care contracting
Systemwide Applications
Electronic health records• Automated patient records• Personal health records
Quality measurement and improvement Consumer information and education
Privacy Concerns and HIPAA
Encourages use of information technology in transactions
Protects the privacy of consumers’ health information
Creates standards governing electronic transfer of information
Cyber Security
IT systems are vulnerable More systemwide applications
increase vulnerability Information losses could be
catastrophic Need to be proactive
Benefits of HIT
For the long-term care system For providers For consumers
Barriers to Use of HIT
Lack of commitment Lack of understanding Financial investment Need to upgrade old technology Changing operational systems Obtaining HIT expertise
Options for Acquiring HIT
In-house development Purchasing software Outsourcing
Guidelines for Selecting a Vendor
1. Analyze the business requirements2. Conduct a vendor search3. Request proposals and quotes 4. Evaluate vendor proposals and
make a vendor selection 5. Negotiate a contract
Summary
Technology, particularly HIT, has become
indispensable to the successful operation of
long-term care organizations, and it will
become even more so in the future.